Iron sulfates represent an essential sink for the toxic element arsenic in arid and semi-arid mining areas with high evaporation rates. Information about the structural incorporation of As(5+) in iron sulfates, however, remains scarce. Here we present evidence for the heterogeneous substitution of S(6+) by As(5+) in the crystal structure of rhomboclase ((H5O2)Fe(3+)(SO4)2 · 2H2O) and its dehydration product (H3O)Fe(SO4)2. Rhomboclase (Rhc) was synthesized in the presence of As(5+) with molar As/Fe ratios of 0, 0.25, 0.5, 0.75 and 1.0, resulting in As loads of 0.0, 0.93, 1.44, 1.69 and 1.87 wt.%, respectively. The unit cell parameters of Rhc increase from 9.729(6), 18.303(2), and 5.432(1) Å for a, b, and c, to 9.745(9), 18.332(5), and 5.436(8) Å when Rhc is crystallized at a molar As/Fe ratio of 1. Simultaneously, the crystallite size decreased from 304 to 176 nm. In situ dehydration of Rhc to (H3O)Fe(SO4)2, investigated by powder X-ray diffraction, shows that Rhc starts to dehydrate at 76 °C, which is completed at 86 °C. The presence of As(5+) does not impact the start or end temperatures of Rhc dehydration but does accelerate the dehydration. X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy (EXAFS) reveals that S(6+), in the Rhc and (H3O)Fe(SO4)2 structure, is replaced by As(5+), while the polymerization of AsO4-tetrahedra and FeO6-octahedra during the formation of (H3O)Fe(SO4)2 results in a strong distortion of the AsO4-tetrahedron.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2015.11.048 | DOI Listing |
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